http://www.psychologicalscience.org/ind ... gious.html
Risk Factor for Depression Can Be ‘Contagious’
A new study with college roommates shows that a particular style of thinking that makes people vulnerable to depression can actually “rub off” on others, increasing their symptoms of depression six months later.
The research, from psychological scientists Gerald Haeffel and Jennifer Hames of the University of Notre Dame, is published in Clinical Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.
Studies show that people who respond negatively to stressful life events, interpreting the events as the result of factors they can’t change and as a reflection of their own deficiency, are more vulnerable to depression. This “cognitive vulnerability” is such a potent risk factor for depression that it can be used to predict which individuals are likely to experience a depressive episode in the future, even if they’ve never had a depressive episode before.
Individual differences in this cognitive vulnerability seem to solidify in early adolescence and remain stable throughout adulthood, but Haeffel and Hames predicted that it might still be malleable under certain circumstances.
The researchers hypothesized that cognitive vulnerability might be “contagious” during major life transitions, when our social environments are in flux. They tested their hypothesis using data from 103 randomly assigned roommate pairs, all of whom had just started college as freshmen.
Within one month of arriving on campus, the roommates completed an online questionnaire that included measures of cognitive vulnerability and depressive symptoms. They completed the same measures again 3 months and 6 months later; they also completed a measure of stressful life events at the two time points.
The results revealed that freshmen who were randomly assigned to a roommate with high levels of cognitive vulnerability were likely to “catch” their roommate’s cognitive style and develop higher levels of cognitive vulnerability; those assigned to roommates who had low initial levels of cognitive vulnerability experienced decreases in their own levels. The contagion effect was evident at both the 3-month and 6-month assessments.
Most importantly, changes in cognitive vulnerability affected risk for future depressive symptoms: Students who showed an increase in cognitive vulnerability in the first 3 months of college had nearly twice the level of depressive symptoms at 6 months than those who didn’t show such an increase.
The findings provide striking evidence for the contagion effect, confirming the researchers’ initial hypothesis.
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Risk Factor for Depression Can Be ‘Contagious’
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Risk Factor for Depression Can Be ‘Contagious’
What will the world be like after its ruler is removed?
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Re: Risk Factor for Depression Can Be ‘Contagious’

The green careening planet
spins blindly in the dark
so close to annihilation.
Listen. No one listens. Meow.
spins blindly in the dark
so close to annihilation.
Listen. No one listens. Meow.
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Re: Risk Factor for Depression Can Be ‘Contagious’
What will the world be like after its ruler is removed?
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Re: Risk Factor for Depression Can Be ‘Contagious’
There is nothing surprising here. It harks back to the prescription to surround yourself as far as possible with positive, upbeat people and to tell all the dreary doomsayers that you have moved to Australia ( unless of course you already live in Australia). All the evidence bears out s that the kind of thinking style which leads to and perpetuates depression is fixable through therapies such as MBCT and related approaches.
He is happy whose circumstances suit his temper, but he is more excellent who can suit his temper to his circumstances (Hume).
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Re: Risk Factor for Depression Can Be ‘Contagious’
MBCT? Will it cure climate change? or does that take Australia too?En_Route wrote:There is nothing surprising here. It harks back to the prescription to surround yourself as far as possible with positive, upbeat people and to tell all the dreary doomsayers that you have moved to Australia ( unless of course you already live in Australia). All the evidence shoes that the kind of thinking that leads to and perpetuates depression is fixable through therapies such as MBCT and related approaches.

What will the world be like after its ruler is removed?
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Re: Risk Factor for Depression Can Be ‘Contagious’
Why did I only focus on the "rub off on others" phrase? 

Nurse, where the fuck's my cardigan?
And my gin!
And my gin!
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